 Reactions have begun to trail the one million-man march proposed by the Nigerian Indigenous Nationalities Alliance for Self-Determination, which is to hold at the United Nations headquarters in New York, United States, between September 14th and 2021. The center of UQ feels the pause of some socio-political organizations in this report. The planned march to be led by Nina's chairman, Professor Banji Akintoye, among other leaders of the group is to protest the socio-political conditions in Nigeria, a referendum on self-determination and the abolition of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. But interestingly, this development seems to have divided the southern and middle-bound groups, as some of them say they are not aware of the protest. To speak to the publicity secretary of O'Hanez and Dewo to fuel his pause on this. If you look at civil society, the operation of civil society, civil society has the right to protest in Nigeria and the group you are talking about belongs to the cause of civil society. The civil society has the right to protest, they don't even need approval as such, they get approval from the appropriate waters and O'Hanez is not the appropriate water to give approval. Also, the Pan-Niger Delta Forum publicity secretary Ken Robinson says, though they are yet to be informed, he supports the move if the planned protest is to demand a better Nigeria. So I could say that Pandef is not aware or has not been consulted on the planned protest. Whatever any group would do to make Nigeria a better country, Pandef supports it. Because we have not been consulted, it does not mean that Nigerians do not have the right to express their disaffections and their grievances at any level in the world. Meanwhile, the spokesman for Nina's Maxwell Adelie said the group had begun mobilization in the United States for the proposed match, which he said would be the mother of all matches by Nigerians in America. Jacinta Obuquo for PLOS TV Africa.